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Shabbat Shalom: Parshat Metzorah Leviticus 14:1-15:33
By Shlomo Riskin
Efrat, Israel – “This shall be the law of the leper
in the day of his cleansing, he shall be brought unto the priest” (Lev.
14:2)
Do houses have souls? Do nations?
In the opening of this week’s portion of Metzorah, the Torah introduces us
to the law commanding a person to go to the priest who determined the nature
of his ‘plague of leprosy’ (nega tzoraat). If the scab was diagnosed as
tzoraat, the development of the disease required the constant inspection of
the priest. Our portion of Metzorah opens with the complex details of the
purification process once the disease is over. This ritual requires two
kosher birds, a piece of cedar, crimson wool, and a hyssop branch. One bird
is slaughtered while the other is ultimately sent away. But this is only the
beginning of a purification process that lasts eight days, culminating in a
guilt offering brought at the holy temple.
Only after the entire procedure was concluded could a person be declared
ritually clean. But if this all sounds foreign, complicated and involved,
the Biblical concepts appear even stranger when we discover that this “plague
of leprosy (nega tzoraat)” is not limited to humans: “G-d spoke unto
Moses and Aaron, saying: ‘When you come to the land of Canaan, which I
give to you as an inheritance, and I put the plague of leprosy (nega hzoraat)
in a house of the land of your possession, then he that owns the house shall
come and tell the priest....” (Lev. 14:33-35).
How are we to understand that the very same malady—nega tzoraat—that
describes what is generally referred to as a leprous ailment of a human
being, has the power to also afflict the walls of a house! A person is one
thing, but a house suffering a plague of leprosy?
Secondly, when we examine the text we find an interesting distinction
between these two species of tzoraat. “The plague of leprosy” that
strikes people is presented in straight-forward terms: “If a person shall
have in the skin a swelling, a scab, or a bright spot, and it be in the skin
of his flesh the plague of leprosy (nega tzoraat)...” (Lev. 13:3)
But the plague that strikes houses is introduced by an entirely different
concept: “When you come to the land of Canaan, which I am giving to you as
an inheritance, I will put the plague of leprosy...” (Lev. 14:34).
Why is the commandment of the plagued house placed in the context of the
Land of Israel? If indeed the disease can descend upon houses, why only the
houses in the Land of Israel?
A third element to consider are the differences in the visible aspects of
these two diseases.
Regarding the person himself, the Torah speaks of a white discoloration, but
as far as the house is concerned, if a white spot appeared on the wall
nothing would be wrong.
“Then the priest shall command that they empty the house... and he shall
look at the plague and behold, if the plague be in the walls and consists of
penetrating streaks that are bright green or bright red....” (Lev.
14:36-37)
We must keep in mind that translating nega hzoraat as a ‘plague of leprosy’
is inadequate. Biblical commentaries ranging from the 12th century Ramban to
the 19th century Rabbi Samson Raphael Hirsch claim that nega hzoraat cannot
possibly be an illness in the classic sense, for if that were true, why does
the Torah assign the ‘medical’ task of determining illness to a priest?
Priests were teachers and keepers of the religious tradition, not doctors or
medical experts.
If nega hzoraat is a spiritual illness, a metaphor for the state of the
soul, then just as one soul is linked to one body, the souls of the members
of a family are linked to the dwelling where they all live together. And the
walls of a house certainly reflect the atmosphere engendered by its
residents. A house can be either warm or cold, loving or tense. Some houses
are ablaze with life, permeating Jewishness and hospitality: mezuzahs on the
doorposts, candelabra, menorahs and Jewish art on the walls, books on
Judaism on the shelves, and place-settings for guests always adorning the
table. But in other homes, the silence is so heavy it feels like a living
tomb, or the screams of passionate red-hot anger which can be heard outside
frighten away any would-be visitor, or the green envy of the residents
evident in the gossip they constantly speak causes any guest to feel
uncomfortable.
Now why should this “disease” be specifically connected to the Land—or
more specifically, the people—of Israel? To find the unique quality of
Israel all we have to do is examine the idea of Bet Yisrael, the House of
Israel. The nature of a household is that as long as there is mutual love
and shared responsibility, then that house will be blessed and its walls won’t
be struck with a plague of leprosy. To the extent that the covenant of
mutual responsibility is embraced by the people, then the house of Israel
will be blessed. We must act toward each other ‘with the same morality,
ethics and love present in every blessed family. If not, a nega tzoraat
awaits us. And our holy land of Israel is especially sensitive to any moral
infraction.
Shabbat Shalom
Shlomo Riskin
Chancellor Ohr Torah Stone
Chief Rabbi - Efrat Israel
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